Publications by authors named "Barbara Druml"

Article Synopsis
  • Game meat is often adulterated with cheaper meat, raising concerns about food authenticity.
  • Researchers developed a real-time PCR assay to identify and quantify roe deer meat in food, including a method to compare DNA isolates.
  • An interlaboratory trial with 14 labs tested this assay's performance, showing it can effectively detect and measure roe deer content in meat mixtures, indicating its potential for food safety and authenticity.
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In order to protect the consumer from meat adulteration it is necessary to identify and quantify the meat content in foodstuffs. Game meat is particularly susceptible for fraudulent labeling since it is more valuable than meat from domestic animals. The paper presents a TaqMan real-time PCR assay for the quantitative determination of roe deer in meat products.

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This contribution presents a single real-time PCR assay allowing the determination of the deer content (the sum of fallow deer (Dama dama), red deer (Cervus elaphus) and sika deer (Cervus nippon)) in meat products to detect food adulteration. The PCR assay does not show cross-reactivity with 20 animal species and 43 botanical species potentially contained in game meat products. The limit of quantification is 0.

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DNA based methods play an increasing role in food safety control and food adulteration detection. Recent papers show that high resolution melting (HRM) analysis is an interesting approach. It involves amplification of the target of interest in the presence of a saturation dye by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subsequent melting of the amplicons by gradually increasing the temperature.

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